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Government concerned over emergency housing budget blowout

27 Feb, 2017 8:41am

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The growing issue of homelessness has been one of the biggest stories of the year. Families forced to sleep in cars or take out huge loans for emergency housing. Then there are the cases of work and income paying massive money for private accommodation like motels where things can turn chaotic.

The government has been forced to defend itself over the homeless issue over the past few years and has said its policies are working.

The Prime Minister told Newstalk ZB's Mike Hosking on Monday very complex cases were being flushed out, including people who have been blacklisted in the private sector, who have often been evicted from the state sector and have criminal records including drug offending and family violence.

Te Puia Marae in Auckland seemed to be better at making some progress with those families than Government agencies, he said.

English told RNZ the government was spending $300m over four years for emergency housing.

"The spend that really matters is the spend that goes on wraparound services around those families to try and straighten them out."

The people involved had not had successful lives and came from a mixture of family violence, criminal and drug offending backgrounds.

"If it's uncovering demand that's good, it's bringing problems to the surface - makes it easier to deal with them, bearing in mind these are people who have often spent time keeping out of the system."

Meanwhile, homeless people living in motels are also being counted in the country's tourism statistics, Newshub reported.

The Statistics NZ accommodation survey captured the homeless in motels as domestic tourists.

English said the situation was for Stats NZ to deal with, but he didn't believe homeless should be counted as tourists.